20190827 Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Read MoreJerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.
Jerusalem's Underground Cemetery Nearing Completion
Rolzur Tunneling, commissioned by Hevra Kadisha Kehilat Yerushalaim, a Jewish burial society in Jerusalem, is nearing completion of a subterranean cemetery, in tunnels with a total length of 1.5 Km at a depth of a 15 floor building, housing over 30,000 graves, dug into the walls and floor of the structure. The $50 million project is expected to become operational in October 2019 and to provide a solution for diminishing real estate for Jewish burial in the city.